Meaning Virtual reality
What does Virtual reality mean? Here you find 38 meanings of the word Virtual reality. You can also add a definition of Virtual reality yourself

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Virtual reality


An artificial three-dimentional (3-D) image or experience, created by a computer, and which seems real to the person looking at it.
Source: businessballs.com

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Virtual reality


Computer-generated simulation of reality in which users can interact with the use of specialised peripherals.
Source: hrinz.org.nz (offline)

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Virtual reality


A technology that allows one to experience and interact with images in a simulated three-dimensional environment. For example, you could design a room in a house on your computer and actually feel that you are walking around in it even though it was never built. (The Holodeck in the science-fiction TV series Star Trek : Voyager would be the ultimat [..]
Source: tutorialspoint.com (offline)

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Virtual reality


An artificial environment created with computer hardware and software to simulate the look and feel of a real environment. A user wears earphones, a special pair of gloves, and goggles that create a 3 [..]
Source: dataprise.com

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality (VR) provides a computer-generated 3D environment that surrounds a user and responds to that individual’s actions in a natural way, usually through immersive head-mounted displays and [..]
Source: gartner.com

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Virtual reality


A technology that enables a person to interact with a computer-simulated environment, be it based on a real or an imagined place
Source: tate.org.uk

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Virtual reality


Technology that allows a user to interact with a computer-simulated environment. Most current virtual reality environments are visual experiences displayed on a computer screen or through stereoscopic [..]
Source: digitizationguidelines.gov

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Virtual reality


A computer simulation of a real 3-dimensional world, often supplemented by sound effects. One early example allowed you to drive through a city, turn at any street intersection, and see what you would [..]
Source: walthowe.com

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Virtual reality


An interactive, computer-generated simulated environment with which users can interact using specialized peripherals such as data gloves and head-mounted computer-graphic displays.
Source: atis.org (offline)

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Virtual reality


n. 1. Computer simulations that use 3-D graphics and devices such as the Dataglove to allow the user to interact with the simulation. See cyberspace. 2. A form of network interaction incorporating asp [..]
Source: hacker-dictionary.com

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Virtual reality


a computer simulation of a real or imaginary system that enables a user to perform operations on the simulated system and shows the effects in real time.
Source: literacynet.org

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Virtual reality


Jensens Internet Dictionary Computer and video "VR" simulations that entail wearing headgear, electronic gloves, and possibly electronic body suits such that users are immersed in a cyberspace of simulated reality that gives the sensation of being in a three-dimensional world where objects can be moved about with hand movements and sensat [..]
Source: comptechdoc.org (offline)

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Virtual reality


An artificial environment created with computer hardware and software and presented to the user in such a way that it appears and feels like a real environment. To "enter" a virtual reality, [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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Virtual reality


a simulated 3-D setting made by way of computer graphics, memory, and processes. It is frequently utilized to make simulated settings for activities like flying a jet or investigating an area, that ar [..]
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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Virtual reality


An electronic environment created especially for computer users through the use of software that simulates the visual appearance of three-dimensional reality but lacks physical substance, used mainly [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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Virtual reality


The use of multimedia to create a simulation of a product or service so that a user can experience and interact with it (e.g. driving a car).
Source: consp.com

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Virtual reality


The simulation of an environment by presentation of 3D moving images and associated sounds, giving the user the impression of being able to move around with the simulated environment. Users wear helme [..]
Source: ict4lt.org

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Virtual reality


Computer-generated environment that simulates physical presence in real or imaginary places.
Source: eventplannerspain.com

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Virtual reality


The realistic simulation or modeling of places or things using computers. Sometimes used to refer to models or representations in general.
Source: feedyourbrains.com

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality, sometimes called VR, refers to computer simulations of real-world "environments" that use 3-D graphics and external devices like a dataglove or helmet to allow users to inte [..]
Source: learnthenet.com

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Virtual reality


While the word "virtual" is typically overused in the computer world, it is aptly placed in the phrase "virtual reality." According to the American Heritage Dictionary, virtual mea [..]
Source: pc.net

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Virtual reality


Processes and devices that seek to provide total immersion experiences in which a sense of daily experiential reality is replaced by a digitally simulated one. VR seeks to replace one or more sources of sensory experience with a visual, aural or tactile simulation that feels as immediate as the real world. A variety of VR devices and applications e [..]
Source: culturalpolitics.net (offline)

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Virtual reality


Computer simulated environment within which humans are able to interact in some manner that approximates interactions in the physical world.
Source: coiera.com

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality or virtual realities (VR), also known as immersive multimedia or computer-simulated reality, is a computer technology that replicates an environment, real or imagined, and simulates a user's physical presence and environment to allow for u
Source: iabuk.net (offline)

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality (often called VR for short) is generally speaking an attempt to provide more natural, human interfaces to software. It can be as simple as a pseudo 3D interface or as elaborate as an i [..]
Source: saugus.net

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Virtual reality


A high-tech recycling program for Wired headlines.
Source: theverge.com

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Virtual reality


Refers generally to interactive multimedia environments that present users with a sensory experience similar in some ways to our experience of the real world.
Source: opengeospatial.org

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality is the reproduction of an environment, be it real or imaginary, and simulates the presence and physical environment of a user in order to allow user interaction.
Source: packshot-creator.com

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Virtual reality


(VR): The creation and display of synthetic dynamic scenes and situations, often with the goal of providing a close enough rendition of the scene to convince the observer that they are actually there. In practice, the term has been applied to simulations that do not even come close to this goal. For higher end applications, use of immersive video, [..]
Source: telepresence.strath.ac.uk (offline)

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality refers to computer-generated environments or realities that are designed to simulate a person’s physical presence in a specific environment that is designed to feel real. The purpose [..]
Source: techopedia.com

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Virtual reality


is the use of modeling and simulation to enable a person to interact with a three-dimensional visual representation of a real or imaginary system in an immersive, multi-sensory, and interactive manner. The user wears goggles, headsets, gloves, or body suits to interact with the simulation. The motion sensors pick up the user’s movements and adjust [..]
Source: acm-sigsim-mskr.org (offline)

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Virtual reality


An artificial environment that is experienced through sensory stimuli provided by a computer. Learn More
Source: decisionanalyst.com

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Virtual reality


A computer technology that simulates a real or imagined environment so that the user can interact with it as if physically present.
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality (VR) is an interactive computer-generated experience taking place within a simulated environment. It incorporates mainly auditory and visual feedback, but may also allow other types of [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality (VR) is an interactive computer-generated experience taking place within a simulated environment. It incorporates mainly auditory and visual feedback, but may also allow other types of [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Virtual reality


Virtual reality (VR) is an interactive computer-generated experience taking place within a simulated environment. It incorporates mainly auditory and visual feedback, but may also allow other types of [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Virtual reality


Virtual Reality was the name of a series of six gamebooks released in 1993 and 1994. Four of the books were written by Dave Morris, and two by Mark Smith.
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Virtual reality


"Virtual Reality" is a single released by the Italian singer Alexia solely in Finland in 1997.
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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